Comparative Pharmacology
Head-to-head clinical analysis: JENTADUETO XR versus NESINA.
Head-to-head clinical analysis: JENTADUETO XR versus NESINA.
JENTADUETO XR vs NESINA
Comparing the clinical profiles, pharmacokinetic behaviors, and safety indices of these two therapeutic agents.
JENTADUETO XR combines linagliptin, a DPP-4 inhibitor that increases incretin levels (GLP-1, GIP) leading to glucose-dependent insulin secretion and decreased glucagon release, and metformin, an AMPK activator that decreases hepatic gluconeogenesis, reduces intestinal glucose absorption, and improves insulin sensitivity.
Inhibitor of dipeptidyl peptidase-4 (DPP-4), preventing inactivation of incretin hormones (GLP-1, GIP), thereby increasing insulin secretion and decreasing glucagon release in a glucose-dependent manner.
The usual starting dose of JENTADUETO XR (empagliflozin/metformin extended-release) is 5 mg/1000 mg orally once daily with the evening meal. Dose can be increased to a maximum of 12.5 mg/2000 mg once daily based on glycemic control and tolerability.
25 mg orally once daily.
None Documented
None Documented
Linagliptin: 12 h (terminal, steady-state) with once-daily dosing providing sustained DPP-4 inhibition. Metformin: 6.2 h (terminal elimination) in patients with normal renal function; prolonged in renal impairment, contraindicated if eGFR < 30 mL/min/1.73 m².
Terminal elimination half-life: 12.4–26.1 hours (mean ~21 hours); supports once-daily dosing
Linagliptin: ~90% excreted unchanged in feces via enterohepatic recycling, <5% renally eliminated. Metformin: ~90% eliminated unchanged in urine via glomerular filtration and tubular secretion, <10% in feces.
Renal: 87% (75% as unchanged drug, 12% as inactive metabolites); Fecal: <1%
Category C
Category C
DPP-4 Inhibitor / Biguanide Combination
DPP-4 Inhibitor